The exercise focused on maintaining and strengthening military interoperability with the Jordanian Armed Forces and practicing current MPF concepts using existing platforms in support of expeditionary crisis action and contingency operations.

“Some of the big things we hope to accomplish here are getting the Marines and Sailors trained on MPF operations. It’s something the Marine Corps hasn’t done a lot of over the last ten years, but we are refocusing everyone back to the amphibious roots that the Marine Corps was founded on,” said Capt. Christopher Tucker, the Officer In Charge of Landing Force Support Party, Arrival and Assembly Operations Group, 1st MEB, and native of Toledo, Ohio.

During an MPF operation, equipment capable of supporting a regimental-sized mechanized Marine Air-Ground Task Force is offloaded, processed, and moved from the port to the using unit. Eager Lion personnel conducted the MPF operation at the Port of Aqaba, offloading nearly 350 pieces of gear in a total of 16 hours.

The equipment for this mission arrived on the USNS 1st Lt. Baldomero Lopez, a Maritime Prepositioning ship, named after a U.S. Marine --a Korean War veteran and Medal of Honor recipient. The vessel is one of 14 ships in the Navy and Marine Corps’ prepositioning fleet. It carries a company of tanks, amphibious assault vehicles, light armored vehicles and a battery of howitzers.

Once the equipment was offloaded from the ship, it was taken to the landing force support party, where the equipment went through a limited technical inspection, was scanned to show it was received and then issued out.

It’s important to maintain the vehicles coming off the ships, said Sgt. Nelson Guevara, wrecker operator chief, Motor Transportation Company, 1st Maintenance Battalion, 1st MLG. If any of these vehicles go down, mechanics need to be ready to fix it and get it back to working conditions as soon as possible. The landing force support party is in charge of all the vehicles coming off the ships. Some trucks are dismantled to fit in areas of the ship so Marine mechanics rebuild them before sending them to their using units.

The MPF Program enables the rapid deployment, engagement, and retrograde of a fully capable MAGTF anywhere in the world. “MPF operations are key to the Marine Corps because it gives us the ability to get equipment expeditiously and conduct our mission fast,” said Master Gunnery Sgt. Christopher A. Toten, airfield services chief, G-4, I MEF. “It’s a lot of work and many of the Marines have never done it. It’s also a good opportunity for the Marines and sailors to conduct operations out here and work with other allied nations.”

Jordan is an important ally of U.S. It provides sea access to the U.S. military, which is vital for Marines to conduct MPF operations, added Toten, a native of Jackson, Miss. It’s a perfect place to do it because it has similar terrain, language and ports and facilities Marines would use in a real world contingency, such as humanitarian assistance missions. Exercise Eager Lion 14, which has been conducted annually since 2011, includes more than 12,500 service members from more than 20 countries. The exercise provides multi-lateral forces with the opportunity to promote cooperation and interoperability among coalition forces, build functional capacity, practice crisis management and enhance readiness.

“Any opportunity we have to train with our partners in the region is always of great value,” said Lt. Gen. Robert B. Neller, commander, Marine Corps Forces Central Command, and native of East Lansing, Mich. “To do so with one of our very best and capable partners, the Jordanian Armed Forces, makes Eager Lion just that much more special. To the JAF, as always, we appreciate your professionalism and hospitality and look forward to continuing to build and develop the special relationship we have with you.”